When the U.S. Department of Justice granted provisional approval of the deal in June, it also gave the condition that Disney must sell off the Fox RSNs within 90 days of the deal closing. Disney accepted the condition.

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And on Disney’s Q3 2018 earnings call on Tuesday, CEO Bob Iger said that Disney won’t have any trouble finding a buyer for the sports channels.

In response to an analyst’s question about the RSNs, Iger said: “The RSNs will be sold, and the process of selling them is actually already beginning. Conversations are starting, interest is being expressed. And it’s likely that we’ll negotiate a deal to sell them but the deal will not be fully executed or close until after the overall deal for 21st Century Fox closes.”

Iger also said that Disney “assumed the responsibility of divestiture” back in December 2017 when it first made an offer to Fox, “if the regulatory process demanded that we do that.” There was never a possibility Fox would keep the networks or buy them back.

So, who might be expressing the “interest” Iger claims Disney is getting?

Here are some possibilities: Comcast (the RSNs might be a consolation prize after losing the bidding war for Fox’s assets); Discovery Communications (which just acquired Scripps Networks); AT&T (which is about to be flush with TV content if its acquisition of Time Warner goes through); Verizon (parent company of Yahoo Finance); or Charter Communications (former boardmember John Malone told the Wall Street Journal in June that Charter is interested in RSNs).